Lakes, ponds, reservoirs - Jason warrensoilwater.okstate.edu/courses/crop irrigation...

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Transcript of Lakes, ponds, reservoirs - Jason warrensoilwater.okstate.edu/courses/crop irrigation...

Surface Water

• Streams and rivers

– diversion by gravity flow or pumping

– often low flows when irrigation water is needed

most

• Lakes, ponds, reservoirs

– gravity flow or pumping

– source of water need for replenishing

Average Annual Precipitation in Oklahoma

Annual Evaporation from Free Water Surfaces

Average Annual Runoff from Watersheds

(acre-inches of runoff/acre of watershed)

USGS, 1975

Hydrologic Considerations

• Panhandle Calculation (Guymon, OK)

– Rainfall: 18 in/year

– Evaporation: 63 in/year

– Runoff: 0.3 acre-inch/acre

• Loss: 63”-18”= 45 acre-in per acre of lake

• Gain: 0.3 acre-in per acre of watershed

• Need: 45/0.3 = 150 acres of watershed per

acre of lake (just to offset evaporation loss)

Ground Water Storage

• Underground lakes & rivers? No!

• Pore spaces between individual particles

(sand and gravel)

• Fractures in hard rock

• Porous sandstone

• Solution channels or caverns in limestone

or gypsum (nearly underground rivers)

Ground Water Movement

• Movement rate is typically tenths of a foot

per day up to a few feet per day

• Rate is dependent on:

– the size and number of openings

(pore spaces, fractures, solution channels)

– the amount of water pressure created by

differences in water levels

Ground Water Terminology

• Porosity: percentage of a geologic formation that consists of open spaces (same as soil porosity)

• Specific yield: percentage of a formation that is occupied by water which will drain out by gravity

• Specific retention: percentage of the formation that is occupied by water which is retained against gravity

• Specific retention + Specific yield = Porosity

• Permeability: property of formations indicating how rapidly water will be transmitted (high in sands and gravels; low in clays)

Ground Water Terminology 2

• Saturated zones: portions of a soil profile or

geologic formation where all spaces or voids

are filled with water (no air is present)

• Unsaturated zones: soil and geologic

materials located between the land surface and

the saturated zone (spaces or voids are filled

with combination of air/water)

• Water table: level in a formation below which

all spaces or voids are filled with water (top of

the saturated zone)

Ground Water Terminology 3

• Aquifer: saturated formation that will yield

usable quantities of water to a well or spring

• Unconfined aquifer (water table aquifer):

aquifer whose upper water surface is the water

table (no layers restricting water movement into

the saturated zone from above)

• Confined aquifer (artesian aquifer): aquifer in

which the water is confined under pressure

between low-permeability materials (aquitards)

Confined and Unconfined Aquifers

Well Drilling

• Dug wells: dug by hand or backhoe equipment

• Driven Wells: sand point wells are driven with a sledge hammer or post driver

• Dug & Driven wells are shallow, low yielding wells

• Professionally Drilled Wells

• Cable-tool percussion wells: a heavy bit is repeatedly lifted and dropped to loosen and break-up formation

– particles are periodically removed with a bailer

– effective for formations containing rocks and boulders

– generally for wells 12 inches in diameter or less

Well Drilling 2

• Rotary: rotating bit connected to a hollow drill

stem through which drilling fluid is pumped

– Drilling fluid serves several purposes

• Cools & lubricates the drill bit

• Removes drill cuttings

• Different rotary versions:

– Direct rotary: fluid down stem, up the borehole

– Reverse rotary: fluid down borehole, up drill

stem

– Air rotary: compressed air is the drilling fluid

Well Components

• Bore hole: cylindrical shaped opening created by the drilling operation

• Casing: round pipe (usually steel) that protects the bore hole from collapse and houses the pump

• Screen (intake section): manufactured screens are best, but other types of perforations are sometimes used (torch slots, saw cuts, etc.)

• Gravel pack (optional): material with greater permeability placed around intake section

Well Hydraulics Terminology • Static water level: water level in a well when the

pump is not operating (is idle for several days)

• Pumping water level: water level in a well when the pump is operating at some flow rate

• Drawdown: difference between water levels in a well under non-pumping and pumping conditions

• Cone of depression: drop in ground water levels around a well or group of wells in response to ground water withdrawal [aquifer volume that is affected by pumped well(s)]

• Lift: vertical distance from the water level in a well during pumping to some delivery point

Well Hydraulics Terminology

Well Yield

• Influencing factors

– aquifer characteristics

– strainer characteristics (screen, gravel pack, etc.)

– well penetration depth into the aquifer

– well diameter (doubling d results in about a 10% increase in Q)

• Yield [Q] and drawdown [H-h]

– Interrelated (Q increases as [H-h] increases)

– Case of diminishing returns (maximum practical Q occurs when [H-h] = 0.88H)

Test Holes

• Is a well feasible?

• Where should it be located?

• Usually rotary drilled; about 4-inch diameter

• Things you can learn:

– depth to static water level

– type and thickness of water-bearing formations

– best methods for drilling and developing the well

– recommended gravel pack, screen size, etc.

Characteristics of Aquifer Materials

Hydraulic Conductivity of Aquifer Materials

Radius of Influence in Aquifer Materials

Gravel Pack

• Gravel pack (envelope): coarse particles

placed between the aquifer material and

the well screen

• Material should be rounded, silica gravel

• Gravel pack purposes:

– keep fine sand from entering the well

– increase permeability around the screen

– allow larger openings in the screen

Well Screens • Screen types

– Home-made: torch cuts; mill/sawed slots (not good)

– Manufactured: shutter/louver type, continuous slot (V-shaped or round wire)

• Length: depends on aquifer formations

– Lower 1/3 of unconfined aquifer depth

– 80-90% of confined aquifer thickness

• Slot width: size to exclude 90% of gravel pack or aquifer material (if the well is gravel packed)

• Diameter: depends on well size; also entrance velocity considerations

• Type of material: strength, corrosion, incrustation factors

Torch-cut slots in a steel casing

Torch-cut slots normally result in about 10%

open area for water flow.

Manufactured Well Screens

Triangular X-section Round X-section

Large Screen Opening Small Screen Opening

Stainless Steel Galvanized Steel

Water Flow Direction

Screen Sizes and Materials

8-inch

Galvanized Steel

6-inch

Bronze

4-inch

Stainless Steel

Well Development

• Purposes:

– Remove skin resulting from drilling mud

– Increase permeability around the well

– Stabilize formation to minimize sand pumping

• Methods:

– Bailing (with driller’s bailer)

– Intermittent pumping (rapid pump on/off cycles)

– Surging (with surge block {piston})

– Jetting (high pressure water streams)

– Others- surfactants, dry ice, etc.

Test Pumping

• Purposes:

– determine well performance

– help in pump selection

• Procedures:

– Pump at constant rate for period of time; measure

Q and drawdown

– Step tests (different flow rates)

• Start at 10% of est. max. yield; measure Q & drawdown

• Increase flow rate; repeat Q & drawdown measurements

Well Yield vs. Drawdown

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

0 100 200 300 400 500 600

Flow Rate, (gpm)

Wate

r L

evel,

(ft

)

Water Level

60 ft

600 gpm/60 ft = 10 gpm/ft

Irrigation Water Quality

• Sediment: suspended sand, silt and clay

• Total salinity: dissolved mineral salts

• Sodicity: sodium content of dissolved minerals

• Toxic minerals: boron, chlorides, etc.

Sediment

• Sediment: suspended sand, silt and clay

• Effects:

– emitter clogging

– nozzle wear and clogging

– capacity of canals, reservoirs, pipelines reduced

• Control:

– large particles- sediment basins, cyclonic separators

– small particles- filters, flocculation/filtration